(8.5 x 11 inches; typescript text, mimeographed on rectos only except for the title/copyright pages) [slight fading around edges of covers, vertical crease adjacent to front hinge with one-inch separation (tear) at bottom, vertical crease in rear cover, residue from former label near top of spine]. 89 + [1] Annual journal of the first Jungian organization in the U.S., founded in 1936 as a forum for the discussion of C.G. Jung's ideas. This issue presents the following six essays: "Shadow, Animus, and Anima," by Dr. Jung himself, translated by William M. Kennedy; "Jungian Psycholog... View More...
(8.5 x 11 inches; typescript text, mimeographed on rectos only except for the title/copyright pages) [minor external wear, short tear in cloth spine covering at bottom front hinge, a couple of light scrape marks on front cover, residue from former label near top of spine]. 111 + [1] Annual journal of the first Jungian organization in the U.S., founded in 1936 as a forum for the discussion of C.G. Jung's ideas. This issue presents the following six essays: "Concerning the Self," by Dr. Jung himself, translated by Hildegarde Nagel; "Time and Tao," by Carol Baumann; "The Psy... View More...
[some discoloration to front pastedown and ffep, otherwise a solid clean book with very light shelfwear; jacket a little rubbed, with tiny closed tears at bottom corners of rear panel]. INSCRIBED and SIGNED by the author on the ffep: "For Tom Doyle, / Thanks for a really stimulating / talk. / Best wishes / - Al Alvarez / L.A., May 16, 1972." The British poet/essayist/critic's best-known work, which "begins with a personal memoir of the young American poet Sylvia Plath and proceeds into a study of how she, and so many artists in the twentieth century, chose to die. The book explor... View More...
[nice clean copy, tiny dent in bottom edge of front cover, no other discernible wear; jacket similarly nice, with just a bit of crinkling along top edge]. Memoir by a Bozeman, Montana, housewife who had some big-time psychiatric and drug-and-alcohol-related troubles, and finally found help at Dr. Lechler's psychosomatic clinic in Bad Herrenalb, West Germany. Her story is presented in alternate chapters by Mrs. Lair and Dr. Lechler. View More...
(no dust jacket, probably as issued) [nice clean as-new copy, clean text, no discernible wear]. From the author's preface: "The Jewish pluralistic interpretation system known under the acronym PaRDeS, which will be introduced in this book, entails the potential therapeutic bridge between the rational-material and the irrational-mystic worlds that I have sought ever since I first immersed myself in studies about the Judeo-Christian impact on Western social sciences in the early 1970s. I have thus devoted this book to the study of psychotherapy as a dual, or a 'dia-logic,' discourse between... View More...